• ROMARCH: Oxford CARC workshop: ‘Ancient Coins and Gandhara’

    Apollo and Daphne: Gandharan schist dish from the Met

    Dr Shailendra Bhandare will be conducting a special workshop for the Gandhara Connections project in the Ashmolean Museum, 2-3.30 pm on Friday 2nd June, 2017: ‘Ancient Coins and Gandhara‘. The workshop is intended to offer a hands-on introduction to Kushan coinage and other coin traditions important for understanding the art and history of Gandhara.  All are welcome, but for practical reasons places are very limited, so please book a place by emailing us: carc@classics.ox.ac.uk

    Priority in booking may be given to students or those with less easy access to the material. Note that those attending in person may be filmed: in order to bring the workshop in some form to the wider global audience that cannot attend in person, we are currently hoping to webcast and record the event using Facebook Live. Details of the webcast will follow in due course.

    With best wishes,

    Classical Art Research Centre

    University of Oxford

    www.carc.ox.ac.uk/GandharaConnections
    Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies
    66 St Giles’, Oxford, OX1 3LU
    Tel: +44 (0)1865 278082
    Fax: +44 (0)1865 610237

  • ROMARCH: Oxford CARC workshop: Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art

    Apollo and Daphne: Gandharan schist dish from the Met

    CARC is delighted to announce that the draft programme for our first international ‘Gandhara Connections’ workshop is now out. For the programme and other information see our website: www.carc.ox.ac.uk

    or the project microsite: www.carc.ox.ac.uk/GandharaConnections

    We will continue to update the programme online.

    ‘Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art’ will take place in Oxford on Thursday/Friday 23-24th March 2017. Attendance is free, but it is necessary to book a place by emailing us at: carc@classics.ox.ac.uk

    We also intend to have a live webcast of the event and issue it as a podcast at a later date. Details will be announced online.

    Best wishes,

    The Classical Art Research Centre

    Dr Peter Stewart

    Director, Classical Art Research Centre

    Associate Professor of Classical Art and Archaeology

    University of Oxford/ Wolfson College
    Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies
    66 St Giles’, Oxford, OX1 3LU

    Tel: +44 (0)1865 278082

    Fax: +44 (0)1865 610237

  • ROMARCH: Oxford Conference, Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art

    Apollo and Daphne: Gandharan schist dish from the Met

    Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art,

    23-24 March 2017

    This first Gandhara Connections international workshop, generously supported by the Bagri Foundation, will take place in Oxford.

    The Gandhara Connections project identifies chronology and dating as one of the key problems outstanding in the study of Gandharan art. Chronology is not only fundamental for establishing the nature of Gandharan art’s connections with the traditions of Greece and Rome, but also for any other systematic attempt to put it in context or explain its development.

    In recent decades there have been some huge strides in understanding the chronology of Gandharan art, including invaluable results from excavations in the Swat Valley and a growing consensus about the second-century date of the Kushan ruler Kanishka and the era that he founded. However, considerable obstacles remain as a result of various factors. For example, only a portion of the thousands of Gandharan sculptures that survive come from published archaeological excavations and looting remains a big problem. Many Gandharan Buddhist sites had long lives which resulted the fascinating but confusing re-use of architectural sculpture in antiquity. There is no clear or agreed understanding about how the styles of Gandharan art changed through time, and indeed a better knowledge of dating is required to improve that understanding. We have very few inscribed artefacts which would help us to establish fixed dates, and the interpretation even of the most valuable Kushan inscriptions is sometimes still subject to debate. Finally, there are open questions about how long the Gandharan tradition continued, and consequently what its relationship is with the post-Kushan art of Central Asia. Above all, perhaps, there is further scope for understanding the art-historical implications of asking such questions.

    By pooling the most recent knowledge and critical thinking across the disciplines of archaeology, art and architectural history, epigraphy, linguistic studies and numismatics, there is the potential to move the debate forward decisively. The aim of this first international workshop in the Gandhara Connections project is to facilitate such an exchange of ideas and information. The proceedings of the workshop will be published in an open access, online book and we aim to make a recording of the event itself available online.

    Further details will follow soon. The workshop will be free, but it is necessary to book in advance by contacting: carc@classics.ox.ac.uk

    Giles Richardson
    Administrative Assistant, Classical Art Research Centre
    University of Oxford

  • ROMARCH: Oxford public lectures, T. Hölscher, “Imagining and Imaging Objects in Ancient Greece”

    Prof Tonio Hölscher, University of Heidelberg, will give the following lecture:

    “In Art, More Alive than in Reality: Imagining and Imaging Objects in Ancient Greece”

    Tuesday 21st May, 5pm

    Danson Room, Trinity College, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BH

    All are welcome.

    For further information contact: carc@classics.ox.ac.uk

    http://www.beazley.ox.ac.uk/events

    Dr Peter Stewart
    Director, Classical Art Research Centre
    University Lecturer in Classical Art and Archaeology
    University of Oxford/ Wolfson College

    Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies
    66 St Giles’, Oxford, OX1 3LU